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Sallustius Lucullus : ウィキペディア英語版
Sallustius Lucullus
Sallustius Lucullus (d. c. 89) was a governor of Roman Britain during the late 1st century, holding office after Gnaeus Julius Agricola although it is unclear whether he directly inherited the post or if there was another unknown governor in between. From epigraphic evidence it is possible he was of British descent.
==Sources==
Little is known of him other than the story recorded by Suetonius that Emperor Domitian put him to death for naming a new lance after himself.〔Suetonius, ''Lives of the Twelve Caesars: Domitian'' (10.3 )〕 This story may mask another reason for Sallustius' execution; the possibility that he took part in the conspiracy of Lucius Antonius Saturninus, legate of Germania Superior, which was put down in the spring of 89.〔Suetonius, ''Domitian'' (6.2, 7 ); Dio Cassius, ''Roman History'' (67.11 )〕
It is possible that he may be identified with the Lucius Lucullus who was proconsul of Hispania Baetica, and a student of marine life, at the time Pliny the Elder wrote his ''Natural History'' (c. 77).〔Pliny the Elder, ''Naturalis Historia'' (9.48 )〕 This Lucullus would have been of appropriate rank to be appointed governor of Britain at the right date.〔Letters, ''Current Archaeology'' 206, 2006, p. 51〕
Dr. Miles Russell of Bournemouth University has suggested another possibility. An inscription from Chichester, recorded by Samuel Woodford in his ''Inscriptionum Romano-Britannicarum Conllectio'' (1658) but since lost, refers to Sallustius Lucullus, giving his ''praenomen'' as Gaius and describing him as a propraetorian legate of the emperor Domitian. Another inscription from Chichester, discovered in 1923, refers to a "Lucullus, son of Amminus". Russell suggests that this is the same Lucullus, and that his father was the native British prince Amminus, son of Cunobelinus, who fled to Rome c. 40. He also argues that Fishbourne Roman Palace, near Chichester, was built for Sallustius Lucullus as governor, rather than, as is often argued, for the client king Tiberius Claudius Cogidubnus. Although other archaeologists have dated the construction of the palace to c. 73, Russell's reinterpretation of the ground plan and finds leads him to date the palace after 92, which would be consistent with Lucullus rather than Cogidubnus as its occupant.〔Miles Russell (2006), "Roman Britain's Lost Governor", ''Current Archaeology'' 204, 2006, pp. 630-635; Miles Russell (2006), ''Roman Sussex'', Tempus, Stroud;(Sallustius Lucullus ) at (Roman-Britain.org )〕 However, other scholars argue against Russell's identification of the Lucullus of the 1923 inscription with the Roman governor. Woodford's missing inscription was dismissed as a fake by R. G. Collinwood and R. P. Wright in their ''Roman Inscriptions of Britain'' (1965): its mention of Domitian, whose name was removed from public inscriptions following his ''damnatio memoriae'', argues for its inauthenticity, and the governors of Britain were proconsuls, not propraetors. The second inscription does not follow Roman naming conventions, meaning it is unlikely to refer to a Roman citizen,〔Various, "Lucullus: a new governor? Or not? The case against", ''Current Archaeology'' 205, 2006, pp. 48-49; Letters, ''Current Archaeology'' 205, 2006, p. 51〕 but rather the conventions of Latin text occurring on Celtic coins circulating in Britain just prior to the 43 invasion, suggesting a British aristocrat writing for an audience familiar with the conventions of Celtic coinage.
Russell has argued 〔Miles Russell ''Roman Sussex'' Tempus (2006); Miles Russell ''Bloodline - the Celtic Kings of Roman Britain'' Amberley (2010)〕 that it would be too much of a coincidence to have two inscriptions made at the same time in the same town citing two separate individuals with the same name, especially as the name ‘Lucullus’ does not appear anywhere else in the British Isles during the Roman period. The position of the altar, at the political centre of Roman Chichester, would further emphasise the importance of the donor for only a major local dignitary would have had the authority to place such piece here. The discovery of the altar citing Lucullus further validates the inscription found by Woodford. Had the discoveries been made the other way round, Woodford’s find following the recovery of the Lion Street Altar in 1923, then doubts would have certainly arisen concerning the authenticity of the latter piece. The reality is that the monumental dedication to Domitian and recorded by Woodford naming Lucullus as governor was recorded well before the Lion Street altar and thus both pieces would appear to be genuine.

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